Doth the ‘C’ in Chennai stand for “Conservative”?
With a series of (mis)happenings in the recent few weeks in my hometown Chennai troubling me, this blog is the vent to all those misgivings. Though the brunt of these incidents was my opposite sex in Chennai, I cannot stop deriding at the fallacious reasoning, the incivility behind such actions and the incongruously adamant “flag-bearers” of such narrow-minded campaigns. That I’ve not been directly affected by such idiocies might temper down the deserved causticity, but it would be a pleasure to voice my opinions in support of womanhood.
I’m not sure if these “news” have reached beyond the TamilNadu tabloids, so here’s a small preview.
September 2005 :
A few days later : Faced with allegations of gender bias, the ban spreads to their male counterparts, depriving them of t-shirts and jeans in college, though it doesn’t seem to ruffle many feathers, primarily due to the guys’ limited choices over their outfit. Earlier, if they were alternating between t-shirts and shirts, presently they’re stuck to shirts, without much dismay.
October 2005 : A Tamil tabloid publishes photographs of a private party, depicting wineglass-doting women, and decries at a couple’s public display of affection, albeit at their private party. Not stopping at adding a distasteful caption to these photographs, the tabloid theatrically agonises at the “influence of Western Culture”. The TamilNadu Police proceed one step further and try to trace the party-goers from the photographs, with the sole intent of putting such “culprits” behind bars. Fortunately, better sense prevailed at the higher echelons of policing, and the attempt was given up, not the before they had shut down the venue of the party – “The Park”. “The Park” was opened after 10 days of courtroom wrangling.
October 2005 : Actress Kushboo had inadvertently shared her views about India Today’s survey on Indian pre-marital sex, and now she’ll be facing at least 40 defamation cases in courts all over TamilNadu. The petitioners’, mostly female lawyers, backed obviously by selfish-motived politicians, ludicrous argument is that they had to undergo mental agony upon hearing Khusboo’s views that pre-marital sex is becoming prevalent in TamilNadu, as indicated by India Today’s survey. Her swift and tearful apology on television did not placate the “moral brigade”, as they preferred to be called. (This “moral brigade”, incidentally, comprised of supporters of a Tamil director, against whom actresses, led by Khusboo, besides others, had launched a tirade, a few weeks ago, for equating them to sex-workers. Tit for Tat, is it ?)
There ends the preview, and that prompted me to muse if the ‘C’ in Chennai really meant “Conservative”. “Conservative” is just a milder term in this context, as these incidents are categorically unwholesome.
Getting to the crux of the issue of “dress-code”, the motive being “to curb eve-teasing” is laughable at the least, for the law enforcers have given up their attempts to inculcate morality and civility into the pervert minds of the teasers, but have instead resorted to curbing the fashion portrayals of the modern day Indian women. The seemingly endless myriad of apparels(pun intended!) of a college-going-female has now shrunk to salwars & saris, governed by the clouded reasoning that other attires seem to provoke the teasers to their perverse heights. Sarika Shah was properly attired on that fateful day, and so were hundreds of other victims. Such a “reasoning” is parallel to a Stay-at-home-if-you-don’t-want-to-get-caught-in-accidents-on-street notion. Ludicrous and Laughable!
On the other hand, the ban of t-shirt and jeans on guys, is a respite for folks who alternate between a shirt and a t-shirt. Now, they’ve an extra reason to stay stuck to the same old shirt, and / or pant, for that matter, for months together. Guys !!
After stalling their attempts to book the party crowd, the Police brought the shutters down on “The Park”, albeit temporarily, under the pretext of hosting an unlicensed party. What was brought to the fore was the fight for supremacy between the newspaper and the Police as to who was the kid amongst them. Grow up, people!
TamilNadu, which had revered actress Kushboo as its demi-god, is now volleying her across almost all judicial courts of the state. She had echoed a survey from India Today, a nationwide magazine, on pre-marital sex. Her views seemed to be on the lines that a literate groom wouldn’t expect a virgin bride, with such high rates of pre-marital sex, as shown by the survey. Sensitive, sure it is, but it’s an individual’s opinion, and
If ‘C’ in Chennai really stood for Conservative, I would be happy to retract to “
Sometimes, I wonder if this is where I grew up, if this is the state that spawned the poet Bharathi and if this is the same state with a woman on the Chief Minister’s chair, and if the claims to 33% reservation for women is just electionspeak.
‘C’, as in Concerned,
Arun
